Example sentences of "[subord] [noun] at the [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | The most complex occurs where policy implementation depends upon co-operation between separate autonomous organizations , and particularly where responsibility at the periphery is ( a ) delegated to several organizations with separate territories and ( b ) dependent upon co-ordinated action between two or more local organizations . |
2 | Seeing Curtis at the door in that way she did not need him to repeat his announcement . |
3 | erm What I 've I 've had a look at their team on paper , and erm they 're not strong enough and erm you know , they need more than Marvin at the moment ; they need two or three good blokes , they 're a bit too sort of erm balanced really , you know , they have n't got any big fire power , so erm you know , I think they 're in a bit of a spot down there , even though they probably think they 're not . |
4 | At the top of the scale , business must have taken a number of leading men out of town at the time the assessment was made , including , for example , Robert Thorne , Merchant Taylor and a notable benefactor to the City ; worth more than £20,000 at the time of his death in 1532 , he must have been one of the very richest men in England . |
5 | Diplomats expressed no more than disappointment at the lack of progress ( but that 's why they are diplomats ) . |
6 | Up to 1,500,000 people were estimated to have voted , although congestion at the polling stations meant that some 30,000 voters had been unable to vote when the polling stations closed at midnight . |
7 | You 've got more teeth than Christopher at the moment have n't you ? |
8 | Perhaps erm pressure coming from local communities and ordinary people , rather than theologians at the top , and pressure released in order to allow for greater freedom , variety , flexibility , more open approach to other Christians and other religions , and to try to get rid of some of the obstacles that the past seems to place in our way . |
9 | Although changes at the sensory-motor synapse might occur during the habituation of the gill and siphon withdrawal reflex , they have not yet been formally shown to be either necessary or sufficient for that behaviour . |
10 | This is the moment that the group , believed to be a family , helped themselves to jewellery worth more than £3,000 at the Hatton House Jewellers in Bletchley . |
11 | Boardwalk bounded along with more enthusiasm than grace at the head of the second group while two horses , including the favourite , made the running some three lengths clear of her . |
12 | Guido paused for an instant , then added , smiling , ‘ I expect that 's why your personal monetary situation is rather more loss than profit at the moment — because you invest so much of your time in romance ? ’ |
13 | It was supposed to be work experience , but I did n't do much work other than stare at the test card , and this was a pretty boring experience . |
14 | Very much er so although wages at the end of the war were n't so big you know even then er |
15 | We ca n't afford more than food at the moment . |
16 | ‘ T is safer for a woman than Winchester at the moment . ’ |
17 | The ‘ flak helpers ’ had been little more than children at the time of Hitler 's great ‘ triumphs ’ , and in the hail of bombs , the destruction , and the retreating armies , the remaining image of the Führer as the military genius bore scant relation to their daily experience of reality . |
18 | On the other , a research report commissioned by the Lord Chancellor 's Department was critical of the quality of service provided by duty solicitors , with a high proportion relying on telephoned advice rather than attendance at the police station . |
19 | The Basquiat show was turned down by other major US museums , although attendance at the Whitney rose 20% while the exhibition was up . |
20 | Except to some extent in the Habsburg territories , the men who gained a knowledge of them were destined to remain translators , interpreters or at most consuls , auxiliaries rather than actors at the centre of the diplomatic stage . |
21 | It could seem as if nothing except attendance at the church 's services divided a pagan intellectual such as the professor Marius Victorinus from the educated clergy of a city such as Milan . |
22 | Newcastle were actually shorter odds than Leeds at the start of the season , which was equally ridiculous . |
23 | Although politicians at the time would certainly not have viewed it in the same light , with the benefit of hindsight , we can claim that , as both of the main political parties broadly supported Keynesian economics and the existence of the mixed economy , the differences between them were , in today 's terms , relatively small . |
24 | I knew that there is no death worse for an eagle than death at the beaks of hooded crows . |
25 | We play dominoes more than cards at the minute though |
26 | If present at the time of the tetanus anisomycin reduces the duration of LTP to 3–6 hours r103–105 . |
27 | But if Clitheroe at the centre is a pretty town despite a couple of smoke stacks , the villages up the valley , like Waddington and Slaidburn where we slept , are grey stone and beautiful ; at Slaidburn there is a look at the 17th century . |
28 | With the ends waxed to reduce water loss , and packed in damp newspaper , budwood can just about survive for 10 days , until back at the nursery the buds skill and experience , this operation can be exasperatingly with skill and experience , this operation can be exasperatingly unsuccessful . |
29 | The coaches gradually increased in size , length and weight , until overhang at the ends and a sag in the middle necessitated a third set of wheels . |
30 | If analysis at the EM is necessary transfer the cells in sucrose to a plastic-coated slide ( see Section 4.2.2 ) and carefully spread over an area 1 — 1.5 cm2 without touching the coating . |